Challenges in Forest Carbon Governance: Insights From Southeast Asia

Yingshan Lau, Miles Kenney‐Lazar, Shakura N. Bashir, Robert Cole, Dixon T. Gevaña, Janice Lee, Danny Marks, Michelle A. Miller, Yunrui Ren, David Taylor, Yuchuan Zhou
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Abstract

Meeting global climate change mitigation targets will require enhanced nature‐based carbon sequestration, in which forest carbon schemes play a major role. This is despite criticisms of forest carbon schemes' efficacy, social impacts, and downgrading of other forest functions and services. Against this backdrop, we reviewed existing social science research on the governance of terrestrial forest carbon schemes in Southeast Asia, a forest‐rich region with high deforestation rates that is in many respects representative of the wider tropics. Our narrative review focused on four themes: (i) finance and the political economy; (ii) knowledge; (iii) implementation; and (iv) inclusivity, equity, and justice for local communities. We found that forest carbon schemes have been unable to compete with large‐scale drivers of deforestation, tend to privilege scientific and expert knowledge in relation to carbon accounting and geospatial analyses, are significantly limited by national and local governance issues, and have often not provided the intended benefits for local communities. The literature reviewed largely focuses on donor‐supported and project‐scale REDD+. However, forest carbon governance is rapidly changing. We thus make the case for a governance research agenda that focuses on jurisdictional approaches, increasing levels of private sector investment, the diversification of forest interventions, and efforts to restore the legitimacy of forest carbon credits. These directions for future research are essential for ensuring that forest carbon schemes contribute to effective climate change mitigation and the conservation of forest ecosystems in just and equitable ways that benefit local communities in Southeast Asia and tropical latitudes more widely.This article is categorized under: Policy and Governance > Multilevel and Transnational Climate Change Governance
森林碳治理的挑战:来自东南亚的见解
要实现减缓全球气候变化的目标,就需要加强基于自然的碳固存,而森林碳计划在这方面发挥着重要作用。尽管对森林碳计划的有效性、社会影响以及其他森林功能和服务的降级提出了批评。在此背景下,我们回顾了现有的关于东南亚陆地森林碳计划治理的社会科学研究,东南亚是一个森林资源丰富、森林砍伐率高的地区,在许多方面代表了更广泛的热带地区。我们的叙事回顾集中在四个主题上:(i)金融和政治经济;(2)知识;(3)执行;(四)对地方社区的包容、公平和正义。我们发现,森林碳计划无法与森林砍伐的大规模驱动因素竞争,倾向于优先考虑与碳核算和地理空间分析相关的科学和专家知识,受到国家和地方治理问题的严重限制,并且往往没有为当地社区提供预期的利益。文献综述主要集中在捐助者支持的和项目规模的REDD+。然而,森林碳治理正在迅速发生变化。因此,我们提出了一个治理研究议程,重点关注司法方法、提高私营部门投资水平、森林干预的多样化以及恢复森林碳信用额合法性的努力。这些未来研究方向对于确保森林碳计划以公正和公平的方式促进有效的气候变化缓解和森林生态系统保护至关重要,从而更广泛地惠及东南亚和热带纬度地区的当地社区。本文分为:政策与治理、多层次与跨国气候变化治理
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